System and method to aid diagnosis of a patient

ABSTRACT

A system and method to aid diagnosis of a patient includes a data and knowledge acquisition module and a meta diagnosis prediction module. The data and knowledge acquisition module includes: an input for patient data including any of previous diagnosis, drugs, symptoms and treatment, an input for open data and an input for expert knowledge, and is arranged to use these inputs to create a patient clinical object (PCO), a biomedical knowledge graph and a rule based knowledge graph, and to enrich the patient clinical object using the biomedical knowledge graph. The meta diagnosis prediction module is arranged to use the patient clinical object and the biomedical knowledge graph and/or the rule based knowledge graph in two or more of the following predictors: a diagnosis-based predictor to provide a set of diagnoses based on previous diagnoses, a drug-based predictor to provide a set of diagnoses based on drugs taken by the patient, a symptom-based predictor to provide a set of diagnoses based on symptoms of the patient and a treatment-based predictor to provide a set of diagnoses based on the treatments the patient is receiving. The meta diagnosis prediction module includes a meta predictor to combine any of the sets of diagnoses to give a predicted primary diagnosis.

CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS

This application claims the benefits of United Kingdom Application No. 1605112.0, filed Mar. 24, 2016, in the United Kingdom Intellectual Property Office, and German Application No. 102016205064.8 filed Mar. 24, 2016 in the German Intellectual Property Office, the disclosures of which are incorporated herein by reference.

BACKGROUND 1. Field

The present invention relates to diagnosis of an individual or subject, usually referred to as a patient. The patient may be a human or potentially an animal, such as a specimen of a rare breed or even a pet. In many scenarios, the patient may already be suffering from a disorder, but in others the patient is currently healthy. The invention is thus widely applicable in medicine, healthcare and veterinary science.

2. Description of the Related Art

The diagnosis process is an estimation of the probability that a specific outcome or disease (or condition, usually including illness or disorder) is present (or absent) within an individual.

Providing an accurate diagnosis for a patient is a challenging task. Years of study and daily practice provide clinicians (for example these could include nurses, doctors, dentists, healthcare practitioners and veterinary practitioners) with the skills necessary to estimate this diagnosis. The accuracy of this estimation is crucial to provide the patient with the right treatment. However due to the complexity of the task, a high level of accuracy is not always achieved. An error at the diagnosis level has a deep impact on patient health, since almost all treatments have secondary effects. In the case of mental health, for example, estimating the right diagnosis could be even a more difficult task given the complexity of human behaviour.

Nowadays, diagnostic errors (which can be defined as a diagnosis that is missed, wrong or delayed, as detected by some subsequent definitive test or finding) are clinically and financially more costly than even before. Moreover, diagnostic errors are the leading cause of medical malpractice claims in the U.S. and are estimated to cause 40000-80000 deaths annually.

There are several factors that affect the accuracy of the diagnosis estimation:

-   -   Clinicians have a very short time to see the patient     -   Diagnoses are not obvious in many cases, since several symptoms         might be simultaneously present     -   The “resolution” of the diagnosis has to meet the existent         treatments     -   A given patient is diagnosed by different class of clinicians,         from several specialities and different levels of knowledge     -   Previous diagnoses recorded in the databases might not reflect         the real condition of the patient due to errors when such         previous diagnoses are recorded in the information system.

Consequently, assisting clinicians during the diagnosis process will reduce the diagnosis errors and therefore will improve the efficiency of the healthcare system and also reduce costs by avoiding undesirable secondary effects.

SUMMARY

An embodiment according to a first aspect of the invention provides a system to aid diagnosis of a patient, comprising: a data and knowledge acquisition module and a meta diagnosis prediction module, wherein: the data and knowledge acquisition module includes: an input for patient data including any of previous diagnosis, drugs, symptoms and treatment, an input for open data and an input for expert clinician knowledge, and is arranged to use these inputs to create a patient clinical object, PCO, a biomedical knowledge graph and a rule based knowledge graph, and then to enrich the patient clinical object using the biomedical knowledge graph; the meta diagnosis prediction module is arranged to use the patient clinical object and the biomedical knowledge graph and/or the rule based knowledge graph in two or more of the following predictors: a diagnosis-based predictor to provide a set of diagnoses based on previous diagnoses, a drug-based predictor to provide a set of diagnoses based on drugs taken by the patient, a symptom-based predictor to provide a set of diagnoses based on symptoms of the patient and a treatment-based predictor to provide a set of diagnoses based on the treatments the patient is receiving; and wherein the meta diagnosis prediction module includes a meta predictor to combine the sets of diagnoses to give a predicted primary diagnosis.

This mixture of patient-specific data, open data and clinician's knowledge and its processing according to invention embodiments gives valuable results in terms of a predicted primary diagnosis. The predicted primary diagnosis may be displayed to a clinician on screen, or provided in any other suitable way, for example as a print out or email.

In preferred embodiments, all of the individual predictors are used, to give a full range of predictions based on all the different factors that can be considered. Each predictor takes patient-specific information from the PCO and general information from at least one of the expert knowledge base and biomedical knowledge base. In one embodiment, the meta diagnosis prediction module makes predictions by organizing and processing the predictions produced by the individual predictors, i.e., diagnosis based, drug-based, symptom-based, or treatment-based.

The diagnosis-based predictor can be arranged to provide a set of diagnoses based on a previous diagnosis, for example using a previous diagnosis (or previous diagnoses) in the PCO with input from the rule-based graph to add expert knowledge.

The drug-based predictor can be arranged to provide a set of diagnoses based on drugs taken by the patient using information from the PCO and the biomedical knowledge graph.

The symptom-based predictor can be arranged to provide a set of diagnoses based on symptoms of the patient using information in the PCO and the biomedical knowledge graph.

Finally, the treatment-based predictor can be arranged to provide a set of diagnoses based on the treatments in the PCO and the biomedical knowledge graph.

Preferably, the input for expert clinician knowledge allows input of pairs of two (or groups of three or more) diagnoses and a relation between them that is known to the clinician. For example input this can be in the form of a plain text file. The data and knowledge acquisition module can include an expert knowledge base engine to build a graph from these diagnoses and the relations between them.

The data and knowledge acquisition module may be arranged to extract data from the open sources to form the biomedical knowledge graph, for example as a graph database that contains information about diagnoses, drugs, treatments and symptoms and the links between them.

The data and knowledge acquisition module can include a PCO engine, providing the PCO from historical clinical data as a graph centred on the patient, with information about the patient linked to the patient by categories, such as any of diagnosis, symptom, treatment, hospital visit and prescription. The historical clinical data may be provided, for example from hospital records, or health authority records.

A PCO enricher may provided in the data and knowledge acquisition system, to compare the PCO with the biomedical knowledge graph to equate PCO parts with standard vocabulary and to annotate entities in the PCO with corresponding concepts/information from the biomedical knowledge graph.

The meta diagnosis prediction module can work in any suitable fashion to arrive at an overall primary diagnosis taking into account the various individual predictors used. For example, it may ranks each diagnosis in each set of diagnoses (from an individual predictor) based on a score. As an aside, a set of diagnoses might in fact contain a single diagnosis.

Also, each predictor may be given a weighting based on an accuracy of performance measure. This weighting can be used to determine the number of diagnoses (starting from the top-ranking diagnosis and working downwards in each set of diagnoses) taken into consideration for the primary diagnosis. In this arrangement some of the set of diagnoses are not taken into consideration.

The accuracy of performance measure can be derived any suitable way. In one example it is derived from meta predictor training on a pre-defined set of training examples.

The meta predictor can check the diagnoses taken into consideration from the predictors and select one or more. For example it can select the diagnosis which is present in the highest number of predictors or has the highest cumulative score as the primary diagnosis.

According to an embodiment of a further aspect of the invention there is provided a method to aid diagnosis of a patient, comprising: accepting input of patient data including any of previous diagnosis, drugs, symptoms and treatment, accepting input of open data and accepting input of expert clinician knowledge, and using these inputs to create a patient clinical object, PCO, a biomedical knowledge graph and a rule based knowledge graph, and then enriching the patient clinical object using the biomedical knowledge graph; using the patient clinical object and the biomedical knowledge graph and/or the rule based knowledge graph to provide two or more of the following predictions: a diagnosis-predicted set of diagnoses based on previous diagnoses, a drug-based predicted set of diagnoses based on drugs taken by the patient, a symptom-based predicted set of diagnoses based on symptoms of the patient and a treatment-based predicted set of diagnoses based on the treatments the patient is receiving; and combining the sets of diagnoses to give a predicted primary diagnosis.

According to an embodiment of a further aspect of the invention there is provided a computer program which when executed on a computer carries out a method to aid diagnosis of a patient, comprising: accepting input of patient data including any of previous diagnosis, drugs, symptoms and treatment, accepting input of open data and accepting input of expert clinician knowledge, and using these inputs to create a patient clinical object, PCO, a biomedical knowledge graph and a rule based knowledge graph, and then enriching the patient clinical object using the biomedical knowledge graph; using the patient clinical object and the biomedical knowledge graph and/or the rule based knowledge graph to provide two or more of the following predictions: a diagnosis-predicted set of diagnoses based on previous diagnoses, a drug-based predicted set of diagnoses based on drugs taken by the patient, a symptom-based predicted set of diagnoses based on symptoms of the patient and a treatment-based predicted set of diagnoses based on the treatments the patient is receiving; and combining the sets of diagnoses to give a predicted primary diagnosis.

A method or computer program according to preferred embodiments of the present invention can comprise any combination of the previous apparatus aspects, without restriction as to the specific parts of the system involved. Methods or computer programs according to these further embodiments can be described as computer-implemented in that they require processing and memory capability.

The apparatus according to preferred embodiments is described as configured or arranged to, or simply “to” carry out certain functions. This configuration or arrangement could be by use of hardware or middleware or any other suitable system. In preferred embodiments, the configuration or arrangement is by software.

Thus according to one aspect there is provided a program which, when loaded onto at least one computer configures the computer to become the system according to any of the preceding system definitions or any combination thereof.

According to a further aspect there is provided a program which when loaded onto the at least one computer configures the at least one computer to carry out the method steps according to any of the preceding method definitions or any combination thereof.

In general the computer may comprise the elements listed as being configured or arranged to provide the functions defined. For example this computer may include memory, processing, and a network interface.

The invention can be implemented in digital electronic circuitry, or in computer hardware, firmware, software, or in combinations of them. The invention can be implemented as a computer program or computer program product, i.e., a computer program tangibly embodied in a non-transitory information carrier, e.g., in a machine-readable storage device, or in a propagated signal, for execution by, or to control the operation of, one or more hardware modules. A computer program can be in the form of a stand-alone program, a computer program portion or more than one computer program and can be written in any form of programming language, including compiled or interpreted languages, and it can be deployed in any form, including as a stand-alone program or as a module, component, subroutine, or other unit suitable for use in a data processing environment. A computer program can be deployed to be executed on one module or on multiple modules at one site or distributed across multiple sites and interconnected by a communication network.

Method steps of the invention can be performed by one or more programmable processors executing a computer program to perform functions of the invention by operating on input data and generating output. Apparatus of the invention can be implemented as programmed hardware or as special purpose logic circuitry, including e.g., an FPGA (field programmable gate array) or an ASIC (application-specific integrated circuit).

Processors suitable for the execution of a computer program include, by way of example, both general and special purpose microprocessors, and any one or more processors of any kind of digital computer. Generally, a processor will receive instructions and data from a read-only memory or a random access memory or both. The essential elements of a computer are a processor for executing instructions coupled to one or more memory devices for storing instructions and data.

The invention is described in terms of particular embodiments. Other embodiments are within the scope of the following claims. For example, the steps of the invention can be performed in a different order and still achieve desirable results. Multiple test script versions can be edited and invoked as a unit without using object-oriented programming technology; for example, the elements of a script object can be organized in a structured database or a file system, and the operations described as being performed by the script object can be performed by a test control program.

Elements of the invention have been described using the terms “module” and “unit” and functional definitions. The skilled person will appreciate that such terms and their equivalents may refer to parts of the system that are spatially separate but combine to serve the function defined. Equally, the same physical parts of the system may provide two or more of the functions defined.

For example, separately defined means may be implemented using the same memory and/or processor and/or input/output as appropriate.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

Preferred features of the present invention will now be described, purely by way of example, with references to the accompanying drawings, in which:

FIG. 1 is a block diagram of components in a general embodiment of the invention;

FIG. 2 is a flow chart of a method in a general embodiment;

FIG. 3 is a block diagram of the main system components in a detailed embodiment;

FIG. 4 is an excerpt from a biomedical knowledge graph;

FIG. 5 is an example PCO;

FIGS. 6A, 6B, and 6C are diagrams showing how a PCO can be built;

FIG. 7A and FIG. 7B are diagrams showing enrichment of a PCO using the biomedical knowledge graph; and

FIG. 8 is a diagram of suitable hardware for implementation of invention embodiments.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION

Getting the right diagnosis is a key aspect of healthcare, as it provides an explanation of the patient's health problem and informs subsequent health care decisions Diagnostic errors can lead to negative health outcomes, psychological distress, and financial costs. If a diagnostic error occurs, inappropriate or unnecessary treatment may be given to a patient, or appropriate, and potentially lifesaving, treatment may be withheld or delayed. However, efforts to identify and mitigate diagnostic errors have so far been quite limited. Prior art methods using data to aid diagnosis may, for example, exploit similarities between patients along multiple dimensions to predict the eventual discharge diagnosis, exploit family links or rely on tests or medical hardware.

However, prior art systems do not take into account multiple factors such as patient clinical history, previous diagnoses, biomedical research literature, drugs prescription and dispensation, and existing medical knowledge (for example in the area of mental health).

The inventors have come to the realisation that it would be desirable to provide:

-   -   methods that generate patient related information annotated with         medical concepts, such as diagnoses, symptoms, treatments,         diseases/conditions, drugs extracted from health standards, and         biomedical research literature;     -   methods that combine the aforementioned knowledge base with         domain expert knowledge in order to have a complete snapshot of         patients;     -   methods that mine that big knowledge base in order to get as         many relevant features as possible, for example for mental         health diagnosis, and combine them to support the diagnosis and         reduce diagnostic errors.

The goal of invention embodiments is to reduce the medical diagnosis error, for example in the psychiatric area. The system extracts knowledge from heterogeneous data sources such as the patient's clinical data, bio-medical ontologies, and medical guidelines and uses this information to estimate the current diagnosis of a patient. The diagnosis predicted together with supplementary information supporting the result is then available to the clinician who makes the final decision.

Embodiments of the invention may:

-   -   create a biomedical knowledge base for representing health         related concepts, for example mental health related concepts,         which can be extracted from the literature via public data         sources together with the clinicians' expertise on diagnoses;     -   create a “Patient Clinical Object”, which is a term coined as a         semantically rich aggregation of clinical entities that         encapsulates information about a given patient, such as clinical         history, diagnoses, drugs, treatments (non-drug treatments such         as surgical produces, therapies);     -   develop a diagnosis mechanism that include as many relevant         features as possible for the diagnosis, and which takes as input         the biomedical knowledge base and the Patient Clinical Object         (PCO).

Precision medicine is a medical model that proposes the customisation of healthcare, tailored to the individual patient/subject. This is an emerging approach for disease/condition diagnosis, treatment and prevention that takes into account individual variability in genes, physiology, anatomy, environment, and lifestyle. In this context, invention embodiments support the individual variability of the patients by reducing medical diagnosis errors. Invention embodiments will help providers, payers, and consumers to sift through the volumes of medical information and recommendations to aid with medical diagnosis and treatment.

The following definitions are used in this document:

Diagnosis: the process of determining by examination the nature and/or circumstance of a disease or condition from its signs and symptoms.

Medical diagnosis error: a diagnosis that is missed, wrong or delayed, as detected by some subsequent definitive test or finding.

Medical treatment: the management and care of a patient, including for example in the mental health area, nursing, psychological intervention and specialist mental health rehabilitation. This term may also include “alternative” medical treatments and medication which may be prescribed, if so wished, for example, homeopathic/hypnosis/acupuncture treatment.

Drugs: medications that treat or prevents or alleviates the symptoms of a disease or condition.

FIG. 1 shows a general embodiment of the invention. A system 10 is designed to aid diagnosis of a patient (and in fact can provide a diagnosis alone from patient data, open data and general expert knowledge, without a clinician's additional input). The system includes a data and knowledge acquisition module 20 which takes in and works on this data to produce useful outputs, for example in the form of the PCO 40, biomedical expert knowledge graph 50 and rule-based knowledge graph 60. There is also a meta diagnosis prediction module 30 which used these products to provide predictions using predictors P10 to P40. Each predictor provides a prediction based on a different factor or viewpoint. These predictions are combined to give a final prediction.

Looking at the modules in more detail, the data and knowledge acquisition module includes: an input for patient data including, for example, previous diagnosis, drugs, symptoms and treatment, an input for open data and an input for expert clinician knowledge. It is arranged to use these inputs to create the PCO, biomedical knowledge graph and rule based knowledge graph, and then to enrich the patient clinical object using the biomedical knowledge graph. Here, enriching includes comparison of the PCO with the biomedical knowledge graph to equate PCO parts with standard vocabulary and hence to annotate entities in the patient data as necessary with corresponding concepts/information from the biomedical knowledge graph. This facilitates later use of the PCO in conjunction with the other standard data.

The meta diagnosis prediction module can use the patient clinical object, the biomedical knowledge graph and the rule based knowledge graph in predictors. For example a diagnosis-based predictor can provide a diagnosis based on previous diagnoses using previous diagnoses with input from the rule-based graph 80 to add expert knowledge. A drug-based predictor can provide a diagnosis based on drugs taken by the patient using the PCO and biomedical knowledge graph. A symptom-based predictor can provide a diagnosis based on symptoms of the patient using the PCO and biomedical knowledge graph. Finally, a treatment-based predictor can provide a diagnosis based on the treatments the patient is receiving (from the PCO) and add knowledge from the biomedical knowledge graph. All three data sets (the PCO, which may be in graph form and the biomedical and rule-based graphs) can be also be used in combination where appropriate.

The meta diagnosis prediction module includes a meta predictor to combine the diagnoses in any suitable way to give an overall predicted diagnosis.

Some key features of some invention embodiments are:

-   -   The inclusion of as many relevant features as possible for the         diagnosis, reducing health diagnostic errors.     -   The selection of the data sources, the process of generating the         internal datasets, the relevant features selection and         validation can be examined closely by the experts by means of a         knowledge acquisition module.     -   The use of “Patient Clinical Objects” (PCO). This term is coined         as a semantically rich aggregation of clinical entities         (information objects) that encapsulates information about a         given patient. The PCO contains information about the patient         and their clinical data, diagnoses, treatments, symptoms and         drugs. This information is linked to the healthcare         resources/entities. Moreover, the PCO will evolve by including         more medical information about the patient over time.

The solution in invention embodiments can rely on a set of relevant features that affect the (mental) health diagnosis. The system to carry this out can consist of two main modules:

-   -   A module that collects, extracts and integrates healthcare data         including domain expert knowledge, patient clinical data, and         open data, to create a knowledge base.     -   A module that mines the knowledge base, identifies all the         relevant features for (e.g. mental) health diagnoses, and         combines/aggregates them to support the diagnosis and reduce         diagnostic errors.

The system includes a data and knowledge acquisition module and a meta diagnosis prediction module. FIG. 3 shows the main components of the proposed solution.

Data and knowledge acquisition module 20

This module takes as input the following information:

-   -   Expert knowledge provided by doctor/clinicians in the form of         rules. The clinicians input the rules as text plain files.         Basically, the file consists of several rows, and each row         contains 2 diagnoses and the relation between them. For example:     -   Diagnosis1, relationA, Diagnosis2     -   Diagnosis3, relationB, Diagnosis4

Examples of rules are incompatible diagnoses, and prevalence of diagnosis

-   -   290.0, prevailing over, 290.4     -   300.0, incompatible with, 309

Where 290.0 corresponds to Senile dementia, uncomplicated, and 290.4 corresponds to Vascular dementia. Also, 300.0 corresponds to Anxiety states, and 309 corresponds to Adjustment reaction.

-   -   Previous diagnoses provided by other clinicians as they are         recorded in the patient clinical history. These diagnoses will         be based on existing international standards such as ICD9 and         ICD10 (The ninth and tenth revisions of the International         Classification of Diseases).     -   Data related to the patient's visits to the hospital and the         associated points of care, including the frequency, timeframe,         and what resources the patient has used.     -   Biomedical research literature, extracted e.g. from PUBMED,         related to diagnoses, diseases/conditions, treatments, etc.         PUBMED is a service of the US National Library of Medicine (NLM)         and provides free access to the NLM database of nursing,         veterinary, healthcare, medical and scientific articles.     -   Prescription and dispensation of drugs, and their adverse drug         reaction, based on European and international standards, such as         ATC.     -   A set of knowledge extracted from available medical standards         such as SNOMED. SNOMED CT (clinical terms) is a standardised         multilingual vocabulary which is generally applicable across         medical and health care areas.

This module collects, extracts, integrates, curates and cleans the aforementioned data sources and produces the following datasets:

-   -   1. Patient Clinical Object, which contains all the related         information about the patient, namely age group, gender, a list         of hospital visits grouped by unit, e.g., emergency room,         outpatient, inpatient, and day hospital, and a list of previous         diagnoses grouped by hospital visits and units.     -   2. Biomedical Knowledge Graph, which contains all the biomedical         knowledge from the literature and available standards. This         resource is used to annotate the patient data (previous         diagnoses, historical clinical data) already curated and         pre-processed in terms of treatments, diagnoses, drugs, and         symptoms as explained in more detail later.     -   3. Rule based Knowledge Graph, which contains the knowledge from         the clinicians and is later applied to the diagnosis support         process.

Meta diagnoses prediction module 30

The primary diagnosis prediction module is a meta-predictor, also known as hybrid/combined predictor that make predictions by organizing and processing the predictions produced by two or more predictors. The individual predictors take the information for the relevant features from the Patient Clinical Object, Biomedical Knowledge Graph and Rule based Knowledge Graph.

Individual predictors produce one or more potential diagnoses, scored according to known metrics for probability of facts taking into account two or more data sources, one of which is the PCO.

The individual predictors can be:

-   -   Predictor based on previous diagnoses. In this case the         prediction is made by checking and reviewing the previous         diagnoses of the patient, re-interpreting those diagnoses         according to clinicians' rules, and categorizing the diagnosis         in two main levels, in relation to the rules provided by the         clinicians, for example Level 1 and Level 2.     -   Predictor based on the drugs the patient was taking. All the         information related to drugs is extracted from the Patient         Clinical Object, and the Biomedical Knowledge Graph.     -   Predictor based on the symptoms of the patient. The symptoms and         their relation with the patient are extracted from Patient         Clinical Object and Biomedical Knowledge Graph.     -   Predictor based on the treatments the patient is receiving. The         treatments along patient data are extracted from Patient         Clinical Object and Biomedical Knowledge Graph.

The meta predictor component combines results of the individual predictors in order to offer better predicting performance. To this end, the component adjusts weights to each one of the predictors. In the following equation

D _(j) =W _(d) P _(d) +W _(dr) P _(dr) +W _(S) P _(s) +W _(t) P _(t)

Where

-   -   D_(j) is the predicted diagnosis     -   W_(d) is the assigned weight to the predictor based on previous         diagnosis     -   P_(d) is the prediction based on previous diagnosis     -   W_(dr) is the assigned weight to the predictor based on drugs         the patient was taking     -   P_(dr) is the prediction based on drugs the patient was taking     -   W_(s) is the assigned weight to the predictor based on symptoms         of the patient     -   P_(s) is the prediction based on symptoms of the patient.     -   W_(t) is the assigned weight to the predictor based on         treatments of the patient     -   P_(t) is the prediction based on treatments of the patient

The component takes a sample from the population of patients and creates a training dataset. The goal of the component is to build an algorithm that automatically applies the predictors, and makes a best guess or estimate the primary diagnosis.

FIGS. 4 to 7 illustrate a worked example. FIG. 5 shows a PCO in the form of a graph centered on the patient. This is an example with simple data.

The graph includes patient information such as gender, age, and anonymized ID. Moreover, it also contains information about what are the diagnoses of the patient, what are his/her symptoms, treatments and drugs. Finally, the graph includes the patient historical visits.

FIG. 4 is an example of the way that biomedical related information is encoded in a graph. This is the Biomedical Knowledge Graph, a graph database that contains information about diagnoses, drugs, treatments, and symptoms, and the relations between them. FIG. 4 shows an excerpt only.

As shown in FIGS. 6A, 6B and 6C, the Patient Clinical Object Builder/Engine takes as input the patient data (previous diagnoses, historical clinical data), and performs data curation, cleaning and pre-processing over such data.

Next, the Patient Clinical Object Enricher identifies all the entities of the patient data, and annotates each one with the concepts/information coming from the Biomedical Knowledge Graph. The outcome of this process is an Enriched Patient Clinical Object which is ready for use.

FIGS. 7A and 7B explain the relevant process flow. First, we identify the patient basic information, e.g., gender, age, and visits. Next, by relying on the Biomedical Knowledge Graph we identify that a particular code corresponds to a diagnosis, a string of letters corresponds to a drug, a word corresponds to a symptom and so on.

The PCO (including this additional information) is used in the prediction module.

A detailed example of meta-prediction follows, using the equation as set out previously.

Basically, each predictor outputs a set of diagnoses each ranked based on a score.

The weight for each predictor represents how accurate its diagnoses are. Each weight then represents the number of diagnoses we consider for each predictor. The meta predictor outputs the intersection of the repeated diagnosis of the individual predictors.

For example the predictor based on previous diagnoses may have the following output:

D Score 300.00 0.7 290.0  0.5 300.01 0.5 290.01 0.4

And a weight of 2 represents that we only consider the first two diagnoses for that predictor:

Let us suppose we have the following example

D _(j) =W _(d) P _(d) +W _(dr) P _(dr) +W _(S) P _(s) +W _(t) P _(t)

And replacing the results of the predictors:

Next, the meta predictor checks which diagnoses are present in all the individual predictors and selects the one which has a high score in terms of the largest cumulative score and/or largest number of times it appears. According to our example, the Primary diagnosis is 290.0.

The meta predictor, in order to calculate the weights, is trained in advance on a pre-defined set of training examples, which then facilitate its ability to reach an accurate diagnosis when giving new patient data.

FIG. 8 is a block diagram of a computing device, such as a data storage server, which embodies the present invention, and which may be used to implement a method of an embodiment aiding diagnosis. The computing device comprises a computer processing unit (CPU) 993, memory, such as Random Access Memory (RAM) 995, and storage, such as a hard disk, 996. Optionally, the computing device also includes a network interface 999 for communication with other such computing devices of embodiments.

For example, an embodiment may be composed of a network of such computing devices. Optionally, the computing device also includes Read Only Memory 994, one or more input mechanisms such as keyboard and mouse 998, and a display unit such as one or more monitors 997. The components are connectable to one another via a bus 992.

The CPU 993 is configured to control the computing device and execute processing operations. The RAM 995 stores data being read and written by the CPU 993. The storage unit 996 may be, for example, a non-volatile storage unit, and is configured to store data.

The display unit 997 displays a representation of data stored by the computing device and displays a cursor and dialog boxes and screens enabling interaction between a user and the programs and data stored on the computing device. The input mechanisms 998 enable a user (such as a clinician or a group of clinicians or system experts) to input data and instructions to the computing device.

The network interface (network I/F) 999 is connected to a network, such as the Internet, and is connectable to other such computing devices via the network. The network I/F 999 controls data input/output from/to other apparatus via the network. Other peripheral devices such as microphone, speakers, printer, power supply unit, fan, case, scanner, trackerball etc may be included in the computing device.

Methods embodying the present invention may be carried out on a computing device such as that illustrated in FIG. 8. Such a computing device need not have every component illustrated in FIG. 8, and may be composed of a subset of those components. A method embodying the present invention may be carried out by a single computing device in communication with one or more data storage servers via a network. The computing device may be a data storage itself storing at least a portion of the data graph.

A method embodying the present invention may be carried out by a plurality of computing devices operating in cooperation with one another. One or more of the plurality of computing devices may be a data storage server storing at least a portion of a data graph or database.

Although a few embodiments have been shown and described, it would be appreciated by those skilled in the art that changes may be made in these embodiments without departing from the principles and spirit of the invention, the scope of which is defined in the claims and their equivalents. 

1. A system to aid diagnosis of a patient, comprising: at least one processor coupled to at least one memory to cause the system to implement: a data and knowledge acquisition module and a meta diagnosis prediction module, wherein: the data and knowledge acquisition module includes: an input for patient data including data of previous diagnosis, drugs, symptoms and treatment, an input for open data and an input for expert knowledge, to use the input data to create a patient clinical object (PCO), a biomedical knowledge graph and a rule based knowledge graph, and to enrich the PCO using the biomedical knowledge graph; the meta diagnosis prediction module is arranged to use the PCO and the biomedical knowledge graph and/or the rule based knowledge graph in two or more predictors of: a diagnosis-based predictor to provide a set of diagnoses based on previous diagnoses, a drug-based predictor to provide a set of diagnoses based on drugs taken by the patient, a symptom-based predictor to provide a set of diagnoses based on symptoms of the patient, and a treatment-based predictor to provide a set of diagnoses based on the treatments the patient is receiving; and wherein the meta diagnosis prediction module includes a meta predictor to combine any of the sets of diagnoses to give a predicted primary diagnosis.
 2. A system according to claim 1, wherein the meta diagnosis prediction module makes predictions by organizing and processing the predictions produced by the predictors.
 3. A system according to claim 1, wherein the diagnosis-based predictor is arranged to provide a set of diagnoses based on a previous diagnosis using a previous diagnosis in the PCO and the rule-based graph to add expert knowledge; the drug-based predictor is arranged to provide a set of diagnoses based on drugs taken by the patient using the PCO and the biomedical knowledge graph; the symptom-based predictor is arranged to provide a set of diagnoses based on symptoms of the patient using the PCO and the biomedical knowledge graph; and the treatment-based predictor is arranged to provide a set of diagnoses based on the treatments in the PCO and the biomedical knowledge graph.
 4. A system according to claim 1, wherein the input for expert knowledge allows input of pairs of two diagnoses and a relation between the two pairs of diagnosis that is known to the expert, in form of a plain text file, and the data and knowledge acquisition module includes an expert knowledge base engine to build a graph from the diagnoses and the relations between diagnosis.
 5. A system according to claim 1, wherein the data and knowledge acquisition module is arranged to extract data from open sources of data to form the biomedical knowledge graph as a graph database that contains information about diagnoses, drugs, treatments and symptoms and the links between them.
 6. A system according to claim 1, wherein the data and knowledge acquisition module includes a PCO engine, providing the PCO from historical clinical data as a graph centered on the patient, with information about the patient linked to the patient by categories including any one or more of diagnosis, symptom, treatment, hospital visit and prescription.
 7. A system according to claim 1, wherein a PCO enricher is provided in the data and knowledge acquisition system, to compare the PCO with the biomedical knowledge graph to equate PCO parts with standard vocabulary and to annotate entities in the PCO with corresponding concepts and/or information from the biomedical knowledge graph.
 8. A system according to claim 1, wherein the meta diagnosis prediction module ranks each diagnosis in each set of diagnoses based on a score.
 9. A system according to claim 8, wherein each predictor is given a weighting based on an accuracy of performance measure, and wherein the weighting is used to determine a number of diagnoses starting from the top-ranking diagnosis in each set of diagnoses taken into consideration for the predicted primary diagnosis.
 10. A system according to claim 9, wherein the accuracy of performance is derived from meta predictor training on a set of training examples.
 11. A system according to claim 9, wherein the meta predictor checks the diagnoses taken into consideration from the predictors and selects one or more which is present in highest number of predictors and/or has highest cumulative score as the predicted primary diagnosis.
 12. A method to aid diagnosis of a patient, comprising: by at least one processor coupled to at least one memory to cause the system to perform: accepting input of patient data including data of previous diagnosis, drugs, symptoms and treatment, accepting input of open data and accepting input of expert knowledge, to use the input data to create a patient clinical object (PCO), a biomedical knowledge graph and a rule based knowledge graph, and to enrich the PCO using the biomedical knowledge graph; using the PCO and the biomedical knowledge graph and/or the rule based knowledge graph to provide two or more predictions of: a diagnosis-predicted set of diagnoses based on previous diagnoses, a drug-based predicted set of diagnoses based on drugs taken by the patient, a symptom-based predicted set of diagnoses based on symptoms of the patient, and a treatment-based predicted set of diagnoses based on the treatments the patient is receiving; and combining any of the sets of diagnoses to give a predicted primary diagnosis.
 13. A non-transitory computer-readable storage medium storing a computer program which when executed on a computer carries out a method to aid diagnosis of a patient, comprising: accepting input of patient data including data of previous diagnosis, drugs, symptoms and treatment, accepting input of open data and accepting input of clinician knowledge, to use the input data to create a patient clinical object (PCO), a biomedical knowledge graph and a rule based knowledge graph, and to enrich the PCO using the biomedical knowledge graph; using the PCO and the biomedical knowledge graph and/or the rule based knowledge graph to provide two or more predictions of: a diagnosis-predicted set of diagnoses based on previous diagnoses, a drug-based predicted set of diagnoses based on drugs taken by the patient, a symptom-based predicted set of diagnoses based on symptoms of the patient, and a treatment-based predicted set of diagnoses based on the treatments the patient is receiving; and combining any of the sets of diagnoses to give a predicted primary diagnosis. 